Claude Marx, director general of Luxembourg financial regulator CSSF, said the Luxembourg Finance Labelling Agency (Luxflag) should serve as an example to European policymakers on 23 October 2024. Library picture: Claude Marx seen speaking at Luxflag Sustainable Investment Week, 19 October 2023. Photo: Guy Wolff/Maison Moderne

Claude Marx, director general of Luxembourg financial regulator CSSF, said the Luxembourg Finance Labelling Agency (Luxflag) should serve as an example to European policymakers on 23 October 2024. Library picture: Claude Marx seen speaking at Luxflag Sustainable Investment Week, 19 October 2023. Photo: Guy Wolff/Maison Moderne

The European Commission ought to learn from Luxflag’s responsible investment labelling scheme, the head of Luxembourg’s financial regulator told sustainable finance professionals at a conference.

The grand duchy’s top financial regulator would like the European rulemakers to take a page from Luxembourg’s sustainable finance book.

After mentioning during an industry conference that he recently met with several European Commission officials regarding proposed revisions to the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation, said that the “EU should consider the important labelling work done by Luxflag.” Marx is director general of the Luxembourg Financial Sector Supervisory Commission (CSSF).

The agency’s “labels are well understood” by the industry and investors, Marx stated. That, in contrast, is “unlike” the widespread use of ’s “article 6, article 8 and article 9,” with some funds switching categories repeatedly. refer to the regulation’s disclosure classifications.

Regulators recognise “the weaknesses of SFDR,” Marx commented. This includes the use of SFDR categories as a labelling regime, not its intended purpose. Marx was supportive of a proposal to introduce a simpler categorisation scheme as part of the commission’s SFDR revamp, currently in progress.

Marx was speaking at Sustainable Investment Week on 23 October 2024.


Read also


Esma greenwashing guidelines

Earlier in his remarks, Marx said that the CSSF’s sustainable finance “priorities were totally aligned with EU priorities.” It “would be highly counterproductive to have 27 [different] national priorities” across the bloc, as the rules are already “complicated enough”.

Marx told the audience that, if they had not already done so, he “recommended reading” the European Securities and Markets Authority’s , which provides a “clear definition of greenwashing” that had previously been missing from the market.

Regulators are “aware” that compliance with Esma’s could prove difficult at times. For instance, there is not an “exhaustive list of terms that will trigger” a review by regulators. To provide further clarity, the CSSF published guidelines in the form of on 21 October 2024, Marx noted. Newly established investment funds must comply with the rules by 21 November 2024, while existing funds have until 21 May 2025 to be compliant.